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picture1_Planning Spreadsheet 9178 | 12 Reducing Carbon Emissions From Indonesia S Peat Lands  By Bappenas | Kehutanan


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File: Planning Spreadsheet 9178 | 12 Reducing Carbon Emissions From Indonesia S Peat Lands By Bappenas | Kehutanan
reducing carbon emissions from indonesia s peat lands interim report of a multi disciplinary study december 2009 this study is commissioned and led by the indonesian national development planning agency ...

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                        Reducing carbon emissions from Indonesia’s 
                        peat lands 
                        Interim Report of a Multi-Disciplinary Study 
                        December 2009 
                                                   
                        
                                                                               
                         This study is commissioned and led by the Indonesian National 
                         Development Planning Agency (BAPPENAS), with the support of 
                         experts from the Ministry of Forestry, the Ministry of Agriculture, 
                         Centre for Climate Risk and Opportunity Management in South 
                         East  Asia  and  Pacific,  the  Bogor  Agricultural  Institute  (CCROM 
                         SEAP-IPB)  and  the  Indonesian  Centre  for  Environmental  Law 
                         (ICEL).  The  UK  Department for  International  Development and 
                         the  Netherlands  Ministry  for  Development  Cooperation  have 
                         provided co-funding.   
                          
                         As a presentation of provisional results, neither BAPPENAS nor its partners guarantee the 
                         accuracy of the data included in this briefing paper. 
                                                                  
                                         BAPPENAS, Republic of Indonesia 
                            CONTENTS 
                                  
                                  
          Summary ....................................................................................... 3 
           
          1. Introduction ................................................................................ 4 
           
          2. Peat Land in Indonesia .................................................................. 5 
           
          3. GHG Emissions and the Economic Contribution of Peat Lands ............... 6 
           3.1 GHG Emissions from Peat Land ...................................................................... 6 
           3.2 Economic Contribution of Peat Lands ............................................................. 7 
           
          4.  Policies and Actions to Mitigate Peat Land Carbon Emissions ................ 8 
           4.1 Policy Options for Reducing Emissions in Peat Land .................................... 8 
           4.2 The Economics of Reducing Emissions in Peat Land .................................. 10 
           
          5. Government and the Private Sector: Incentives for Actions .................. 11 
           5.1 The Roles of Government and the Private Sector ......................................... 11 
           5.2 The Business Perspective: Plantations on Peat .............................................. 12 
           
          6. Moving Forwards: Creating an Enabling Legal and Institutional 
          Environment ................................................................................ 15 
           6.1 National Policy ................................................................................................. 15 
           6.2 International Policy .......................................................................................... 16 
           
          7. Conclusions .............................................................................. 18 
                                2 
           
                                                        Summary 
                   Indonesia has made a non-binding commitment to reduce its GHG emissions by 26-41% 
                   by 2020. With 22 million hectares of peat land that contribute in the order of 1 billion 
                   tons of CO2 emission per year, the government is assessing policies to meet this target. 
                   This study presents the provisional results of an analysis commissioned by the National 
                   Development Planning Agency (BAPPENAS) to assess the scientific basis, economic 
                   and legal aspects for reducing emissions in Indonesia‟s peat land.  
                   Current  annual  average  emissions  between  2000  and  2006  are  estimated  to  be  903 
                   MtCO. Based on current trends, a Business as Usual (BAU) scenario is estimated to 
                         2
                   result  in  emissions  of  1,387  MtCO2  by  2025.  A  provisional  analysis  of  the  current 
                   economic contribution of Indonesia‟s peat land area highlights that the utilisation of peat 
                   land probably contributes less than 1 percent of GDP yet accounts for almost 50 percent 
                   of emissions, resulting in a highly carbon intensive economy in peat land regions.  
                   The potential emissions under each of three main policy measures are estimated and 
                   compared to the BAU scenario. The initial results from this analysis show that:  
                      Legal compliance and best management practices in existing land under production  could 
                       yield 338 Mt CO2 emission reductions by 2025 (24 percent of potential reductions) 
                      Peat land rehabilitation and prevention of uncontrolled fires potentially may add a further 
                       430 Mt CO2 emission reductions (31 percent of potential reductions) 
                      Revision  of  land  allocation,  forest  conservation  and  land  swaps  that  direct  future 
                       development away from peat land could create an additional 513 Mt CO  emission 
                                                                                              2
                       reductions (37 percent of potential reductions). 
                   An economic and financial analysis of oil palm on peat land indicates that at the national 
                   level, there is unlikely to be a significant opportunity cost associated with relocation of 
                   existing permits to mineral soils given the availability of degraded land and the higher 
                   yields  and  lower  costs  on  mineral  soils.  However,  at  the  local  level,  districts  with 
                   significant peat land areas may incur opportunity costs due to the limited availability of 
                   suitable mineral soil in their area.  
                   Overall,  an  effective  institutional  framework  for  peat  and  lowland  management  is 
                   required in Indonesia to overcome overlapping mandates of sector agencies. The first 
                   policy  option,  best  practice  management  in  peat  lands,  can  be  promoted  through  a 
                   performance-based  framework  with  appropriate  standards,  incentives  and  sanctions. 
                   However  care  will  need  to  be  taken  in  the  development  of  appropriate  financial 
                   incentives. A national strategy, plan and finance for peat land rehabilitation and fire 
                   prevention in degraded peat lands is needed, building on and supporting the government 
                   initiative  to  rehabilitate  and  revitalise  the  Ex-Mega  Rice  Project  Area  in  Central 
                   Kalimantan. The third policy option will require a comprehensive review of spatial plans 
                   and development of spatial planning tools in the context of peat  and  lowland  areas 
                   combined with a review of experience on land swaps and the potential  to  scale  up 
                   experience from pilots to a national scale policy and program focused on peat land.  
                   The development of peat land carbon policies and their articulation at the international 
                   level, in particular the UNFCCC, is required given the uncertainty regarding the position 
                   of peat land emissions in a post-2012 agreement. Early action can potentially be achieved 
                   through public funds and the Clean Development Mechanism.  
                   Overall  strategies  to  address  peat  land  emissions  should  form  a  part  of  an  overall 
                   National Strategy for the Sustainable Management of the Lowlands that addresses the 
                   specific challenges of peat and lowland development in the context of climate mitigation 
                   and adaptation. 
                   The second phase of this study will continue in early 2010 and will further refine the 
                   analysis, assess the economic aspects of reducing peat land emissions including aspects 
                   relating to carbon finance and costs following the UNFCCC COP in Copenhagen. 
                                                             3 
                    
                  1. Introduction   
                  1.  Peat  lands  in  temperate  and  tropical  countries  are  increasingly  recognised  as  an 
                                                                                 i
                  important source of anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Indonesia, with 
                  peat  land  covering  about  twelve  percent  of  the  country‟s  land  area,  is  of  particular 
                  importance, accounting for more than 50% of the global peat land area within non-
                                  ii
                  Annex I countries.  Indonesia has announced a non-binding GHG emissions reduction 
                  target of up to 26 percent unilaterally and 41 percent through external support by 2020. 
                  Its extensive peat lands present three specific opportunities to achieve this target: 
                  I. Improvement of peat land management practices to reduce emissions in peat land 
                  currently under forestry and agricultural land use;   
                  II. Rehabilitation of degraded peat land to reduce emissions through fire prevention 
                  and the rehabilitation and management of unproductive peat land; 
                  III.  Consolidation  and  revision  of  spatial  plans  and  land  use  permits  to  reduce 
                  emissions through redirecting economic land use away from peat land to mineral soils.  
                  2.  This  brief  presents  the  provisional  results  of  a  detailed  analysis  commissioned  by 
                  Indonesia‟s National Development Planning Agency (BAPPENAS), and undertaken by 
                  a multi-disciplinary team of Indonesian scientists, economists and legal specialists. The 
                  objective  of  this  analysis  is  to  assess  the  potential  for  reducing  emissions  from  the 
                                     iii
                  country‟s peat lands.  The analysis assesses (a) the present extent, land use and land 
                  cover of Indonesia‟s peat lands, (b) the magnitude of current peat land emissions, (c) the 
                  possible carbon abatement potentials under the three different policy scenarios, (d) the 
                  economic costs and benefits of specific policy options and actions to reduce emissions, 
                  and  (e)  the  potential  application  of  national  and  international  policy  instruments  to 
                  achieve GHG emission reductions in Indonesia‟s peat land. 
                                                         4 
                   
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...Reducing carbon emissions from indonesia s peat lands interim report of a multi disciplinary study december this is commissioned and led by the indonesian national development planning agency bappenas with support experts ministry forestry agriculture centre for climate risk opportunity management in south east asia pacific bogor agricultural institute ccrom seap ipb environmental law icel uk department international netherlands cooperation have provided co funding as presentation provisional results neither nor its partners guarantee accuracy data included briefing paper republic contents summary introduction land ghg economic contribution policies actions to mitigate policy options economics government private sector incentives roles business perspective plantations on moving forwards creating an enabling legal institutional environment conclusions has made non binding commitment reduce million hectares that contribute order billion tons emission per year assessing meet target presen...

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